Variety of transposing instruments












2















A recent question on tuning saxophones caused me to wonder on the variety of transposing instruments.



C - Non-transposing or by whole octaves.



At concert pitch - too many to mention.



Octave above - piccolo.



Octave below - double bass and double bassoon. Also guitar and bass guitar.



D♭



Some piccolos. So, an octave and minor second above?



D



It is not the most common but there is trumpet in D.



E♭



E♭ clarinet - minor 3rd above.



Alto sax - major 6th below.



Baritone sax - octave and major 6th below.



F



French horn and cor anglais - Fifth below



I have a tin whistle labeled G but, as explained in A♭, this could be regarded as transposing in F. A fourth above.



A♭



I have a tin whistle which is labeled B♭ but this refers to its lowest note which is D on a standard whistle. So, if treated as a transposing version of the common D whistle, it would be a major 3rd below and hence in A♭.



A



A clarinet and oboe d'amour - minor 3rd below



B♭



Many. This seems to be the most common case.



Trumpet, B♭ clarinet, soprano sax - a major second below.



Bass clarinet and tenor sax - Octave and a major second below.



Additions and corrections please. I have said little on brass instruments as I don't know them well enough to be confident that I was right. E.g. Wikipedia says of the tenor trombone: "is a non-transposing instrument pitched in B♭". So, where do I enter that?










share|improve this question

























  • Guitar is an octave-below transposing instrument

    – David Bowling
    12 hours ago











  • @DavidBowling Thanks. I don't often see guitar music written in standard notation so I did not know. How about the bass guitar? I think that I have seen that written in bass clef as you would for a double bass.

    – badjohn
    12 hours ago











  • That's right, bass guitar too

    – David Bowling
    12 hours ago











  • @DavidBowling So, if standard notation is used, is guitar music written an octave up in the treble clef?

    – badjohn
    12 hours ago






  • 3





    The specific question on Trombone is well focused, but the general request for “additions and corrections” is not a good match to the SE format.

    – Dave
    11 hours ago
















2















A recent question on tuning saxophones caused me to wonder on the variety of transposing instruments.



C - Non-transposing or by whole octaves.



At concert pitch - too many to mention.



Octave above - piccolo.



Octave below - double bass and double bassoon. Also guitar and bass guitar.



D♭



Some piccolos. So, an octave and minor second above?



D



It is not the most common but there is trumpet in D.



E♭



E♭ clarinet - minor 3rd above.



Alto sax - major 6th below.



Baritone sax - octave and major 6th below.



F



French horn and cor anglais - Fifth below



I have a tin whistle labeled G but, as explained in A♭, this could be regarded as transposing in F. A fourth above.



A♭



I have a tin whistle which is labeled B♭ but this refers to its lowest note which is D on a standard whistle. So, if treated as a transposing version of the common D whistle, it would be a major 3rd below and hence in A♭.



A



A clarinet and oboe d'amour - minor 3rd below



B♭



Many. This seems to be the most common case.



Trumpet, B♭ clarinet, soprano sax - a major second below.



Bass clarinet and tenor sax - Octave and a major second below.



Additions and corrections please. I have said little on brass instruments as I don't know them well enough to be confident that I was right. E.g. Wikipedia says of the tenor trombone: "is a non-transposing instrument pitched in B♭". So, where do I enter that?










share|improve this question

























  • Guitar is an octave-below transposing instrument

    – David Bowling
    12 hours ago











  • @DavidBowling Thanks. I don't often see guitar music written in standard notation so I did not know. How about the bass guitar? I think that I have seen that written in bass clef as you would for a double bass.

    – badjohn
    12 hours ago











  • That's right, bass guitar too

    – David Bowling
    12 hours ago











  • @DavidBowling So, if standard notation is used, is guitar music written an octave up in the treble clef?

    – badjohn
    12 hours ago






  • 3





    The specific question on Trombone is well focused, but the general request for “additions and corrections” is not a good match to the SE format.

    – Dave
    11 hours ago














2












2








2








A recent question on tuning saxophones caused me to wonder on the variety of transposing instruments.



C - Non-transposing or by whole octaves.



At concert pitch - too many to mention.



Octave above - piccolo.



Octave below - double bass and double bassoon. Also guitar and bass guitar.



D♭



Some piccolos. So, an octave and minor second above?



D



It is not the most common but there is trumpet in D.



E♭



E♭ clarinet - minor 3rd above.



Alto sax - major 6th below.



Baritone sax - octave and major 6th below.



F



French horn and cor anglais - Fifth below



I have a tin whistle labeled G but, as explained in A♭, this could be regarded as transposing in F. A fourth above.



A♭



I have a tin whistle which is labeled B♭ but this refers to its lowest note which is D on a standard whistle. So, if treated as a transposing version of the common D whistle, it would be a major 3rd below and hence in A♭.



A



A clarinet and oboe d'amour - minor 3rd below



B♭



Many. This seems to be the most common case.



Trumpet, B♭ clarinet, soprano sax - a major second below.



Bass clarinet and tenor sax - Octave and a major second below.



Additions and corrections please. I have said little on brass instruments as I don't know them well enough to be confident that I was right. E.g. Wikipedia says of the tenor trombone: "is a non-transposing instrument pitched in B♭". So, where do I enter that?










share|improve this question
















A recent question on tuning saxophones caused me to wonder on the variety of transposing instruments.



C - Non-transposing or by whole octaves.



At concert pitch - too many to mention.



Octave above - piccolo.



Octave below - double bass and double bassoon. Also guitar and bass guitar.



D♭



Some piccolos. So, an octave and minor second above?



D



It is not the most common but there is trumpet in D.



E♭



E♭ clarinet - minor 3rd above.



Alto sax - major 6th below.



Baritone sax - octave and major 6th below.



F



French horn and cor anglais - Fifth below



I have a tin whistle labeled G but, as explained in A♭, this could be regarded as transposing in F. A fourth above.



A♭



I have a tin whistle which is labeled B♭ but this refers to its lowest note which is D on a standard whistle. So, if treated as a transposing version of the common D whistle, it would be a major 3rd below and hence in A♭.



A



A clarinet and oboe d'amour - minor 3rd below



B♭



Many. This seems to be the most common case.



Trumpet, B♭ clarinet, soprano sax - a major second below.



Bass clarinet and tenor sax - Octave and a major second below.



Additions and corrections please. I have said little on brass instruments as I don't know them well enough to be confident that I was right. E.g. Wikipedia says of the tenor trombone: "is a non-transposing instrument pitched in B♭". So, where do I enter that?







transposing-instrument






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 2 hours ago









Richard

45.5k7108195




45.5k7108195










asked 12 hours ago









badjohnbadjohn

1,611520




1,611520













  • Guitar is an octave-below transposing instrument

    – David Bowling
    12 hours ago











  • @DavidBowling Thanks. I don't often see guitar music written in standard notation so I did not know. How about the bass guitar? I think that I have seen that written in bass clef as you would for a double bass.

    – badjohn
    12 hours ago











  • That's right, bass guitar too

    – David Bowling
    12 hours ago











  • @DavidBowling So, if standard notation is used, is guitar music written an octave up in the treble clef?

    – badjohn
    12 hours ago






  • 3





    The specific question on Trombone is well focused, but the general request for “additions and corrections” is not a good match to the SE format.

    – Dave
    11 hours ago



















  • Guitar is an octave-below transposing instrument

    – David Bowling
    12 hours ago











  • @DavidBowling Thanks. I don't often see guitar music written in standard notation so I did not know. How about the bass guitar? I think that I have seen that written in bass clef as you would for a double bass.

    – badjohn
    12 hours ago











  • That's right, bass guitar too

    – David Bowling
    12 hours ago











  • @DavidBowling So, if standard notation is used, is guitar music written an octave up in the treble clef?

    – badjohn
    12 hours ago






  • 3





    The specific question on Trombone is well focused, but the general request for “additions and corrections” is not a good match to the SE format.

    – Dave
    11 hours ago

















Guitar is an octave-below transposing instrument

– David Bowling
12 hours ago





Guitar is an octave-below transposing instrument

– David Bowling
12 hours ago













@DavidBowling Thanks. I don't often see guitar music written in standard notation so I did not know. How about the bass guitar? I think that I have seen that written in bass clef as you would for a double bass.

– badjohn
12 hours ago





@DavidBowling Thanks. I don't often see guitar music written in standard notation so I did not know. How about the bass guitar? I think that I have seen that written in bass clef as you would for a double bass.

– badjohn
12 hours ago













That's right, bass guitar too

– David Bowling
12 hours ago





That's right, bass guitar too

– David Bowling
12 hours ago













@DavidBowling So, if standard notation is used, is guitar music written an octave up in the treble clef?

– badjohn
12 hours ago





@DavidBowling So, if standard notation is used, is guitar music written an octave up in the treble clef?

– badjohn
12 hours ago




3




3





The specific question on Trombone is well focused, but the general request for “additions and corrections” is not a good match to the SE format.

– Dave
11 hours ago





The specific question on Trombone is well focused, but the general request for “additions and corrections” is not a good match to the SE format.

– Dave
11 hours ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















3















Wikipedia says of the tenor trombone: "is a non-transposing instrument pitched in B♭". So, where do I enter that?




Yes, brass instruments can be a little tricky for this reason.



Although we say that a trombone is "in B♭," it's actually written in C; it's a non-transposing instrument. But the trombone itself is based in B♭, so first position will play the harmonic series on that pitch. The "in B♭" thus relates to the instrument's construction, not to a score transposition.



The same is true for tubas: you can have Tuba in C, Tuba in B♭, Tuba in F, and Tuba in E♭, but they are all non-transposing instruments. Whereas the score transposes for other instruments, the tubist must learn different fingerings depending on the instrument s/he is playing. (If you think that's confusing, try being the tuba player that has to learn four sets of fingerings!)



To add to that confusion, you'll occasionally encounter some European brass band transcriptions where the tuba (or baritone or euphonium) is written in treble clef as a transposing instrument (!). In cases like this, we just have to let context decide.



And there's one final level of confusion: this doesn't apply to all brass instruments. Trumpets, for instance, are written in transposed scores. The most common is probably the Trumpet in B♭ (which is written like the B♭ Clarinet), but there's also Trumpet in C (which is not transposed) and occasionally Trumpet in D.






share|improve this answer


























  • Thanks. So, most of them are covered by my "too many to mention" comment in C. How about the trumpet, have I entered it correctly? E.g. could a trumpet play a clarinet part?

    – badjohn
    12 hours ago











  • @badjohn Yes, a B♭ Trumpet can play a B♭ Clarinet part. I've addressed this a bit in my edit.

    – Richard
    12 hours ago






  • 1





    Which families of instruments use transposition and which don't seems a bit arbitrary. E.g. saxophones all use the same fingering for the same written note yet the note produced varies greatly. Similarly, a viola could be considered as a violin in F but it isn't.

    – badjohn
    12 hours ago











  • Thanks for the trumpet in D. I'll add that.

    – badjohn
    12 hours ago











  • Trombones are indeed tuned to Bb open. However, there are several different 'keys' in which they're played, and possibly also written in different clefs.

    – Tim
    10 hours ago



















2














(Copied over from the question for easier editing.)



C - Non-transposing or by whole octaves




  • At concert pitch - too many to mention.


  • Many brass instruments, e.g. the trombone and tuba, may be described as being in B♭, E♭, F, etc. However, their parts are normally written at concert pitch and hence they are not transposing instruments in the sense here. The trumpet however is usually a transposing instrument and is mentioned below. It is not the most common but there is a trumpet in C.


  • Octave above - piccolo.


  • Octave below - double bass and double bassoon. Also guitar and bass guitar.


D♭



Some piccolos. So, an octave and minor second above?



D



It is not the most common but there is trumpet in D.



E♭




  • E♭ clarinet - minor 3rd above.

  • Alto sax - major 6th below.

  • Baritone sax - octave and major 6th below.


F




  • French horn and cor anglais - Fifth below

  • I have a tin whistle labeled G but, as explained in A♭, this could be regarded as transposing in F. A fourth above.


A♭



I have a tin whistle which is labeled B♭ but this refers to its lowest note which is D on a standard whistle. So, if treated as a transposing version of the common D whistle, it would be a major 3rd below and hence in A♭.



A



A clarinet and oboe d'amour - minor 3rd below



B♭




  • Many. This seems to be the most common case.

  • Trumpet, B♭ clarinet, soprano sax - a major second below.

  • Bass clarinet and tenor sax - Octave and a major second below.






share|improve this answer


























  • Thanks. So, should people edit this to add further information?

    – badjohn
    10 hours ago












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2 Answers
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2 Answers
2






active

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active

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active

oldest

votes









3















Wikipedia says of the tenor trombone: "is a non-transposing instrument pitched in B♭". So, where do I enter that?




Yes, brass instruments can be a little tricky for this reason.



Although we say that a trombone is "in B♭," it's actually written in C; it's a non-transposing instrument. But the trombone itself is based in B♭, so first position will play the harmonic series on that pitch. The "in B♭" thus relates to the instrument's construction, not to a score transposition.



The same is true for tubas: you can have Tuba in C, Tuba in B♭, Tuba in F, and Tuba in E♭, but they are all non-transposing instruments. Whereas the score transposes for other instruments, the tubist must learn different fingerings depending on the instrument s/he is playing. (If you think that's confusing, try being the tuba player that has to learn four sets of fingerings!)



To add to that confusion, you'll occasionally encounter some European brass band transcriptions where the tuba (or baritone or euphonium) is written in treble clef as a transposing instrument (!). In cases like this, we just have to let context decide.



And there's one final level of confusion: this doesn't apply to all brass instruments. Trumpets, for instance, are written in transposed scores. The most common is probably the Trumpet in B♭ (which is written like the B♭ Clarinet), but there's also Trumpet in C (which is not transposed) and occasionally Trumpet in D.






share|improve this answer


























  • Thanks. So, most of them are covered by my "too many to mention" comment in C. How about the trumpet, have I entered it correctly? E.g. could a trumpet play a clarinet part?

    – badjohn
    12 hours ago











  • @badjohn Yes, a B♭ Trumpet can play a B♭ Clarinet part. I've addressed this a bit in my edit.

    – Richard
    12 hours ago






  • 1





    Which families of instruments use transposition and which don't seems a bit arbitrary. E.g. saxophones all use the same fingering for the same written note yet the note produced varies greatly. Similarly, a viola could be considered as a violin in F but it isn't.

    – badjohn
    12 hours ago











  • Thanks for the trumpet in D. I'll add that.

    – badjohn
    12 hours ago











  • Trombones are indeed tuned to Bb open. However, there are several different 'keys' in which they're played, and possibly also written in different clefs.

    – Tim
    10 hours ago
















3















Wikipedia says of the tenor trombone: "is a non-transposing instrument pitched in B♭". So, where do I enter that?




Yes, brass instruments can be a little tricky for this reason.



Although we say that a trombone is "in B♭," it's actually written in C; it's a non-transposing instrument. But the trombone itself is based in B♭, so first position will play the harmonic series on that pitch. The "in B♭" thus relates to the instrument's construction, not to a score transposition.



The same is true for tubas: you can have Tuba in C, Tuba in B♭, Tuba in F, and Tuba in E♭, but they are all non-transposing instruments. Whereas the score transposes for other instruments, the tubist must learn different fingerings depending on the instrument s/he is playing. (If you think that's confusing, try being the tuba player that has to learn four sets of fingerings!)



To add to that confusion, you'll occasionally encounter some European brass band transcriptions where the tuba (or baritone or euphonium) is written in treble clef as a transposing instrument (!). In cases like this, we just have to let context decide.



And there's one final level of confusion: this doesn't apply to all brass instruments. Trumpets, for instance, are written in transposed scores. The most common is probably the Trumpet in B♭ (which is written like the B♭ Clarinet), but there's also Trumpet in C (which is not transposed) and occasionally Trumpet in D.






share|improve this answer


























  • Thanks. So, most of them are covered by my "too many to mention" comment in C. How about the trumpet, have I entered it correctly? E.g. could a trumpet play a clarinet part?

    – badjohn
    12 hours ago











  • @badjohn Yes, a B♭ Trumpet can play a B♭ Clarinet part. I've addressed this a bit in my edit.

    – Richard
    12 hours ago






  • 1





    Which families of instruments use transposition and which don't seems a bit arbitrary. E.g. saxophones all use the same fingering for the same written note yet the note produced varies greatly. Similarly, a viola could be considered as a violin in F but it isn't.

    – badjohn
    12 hours ago











  • Thanks for the trumpet in D. I'll add that.

    – badjohn
    12 hours ago











  • Trombones are indeed tuned to Bb open. However, there are several different 'keys' in which they're played, and possibly also written in different clefs.

    – Tim
    10 hours ago














3












3








3








Wikipedia says of the tenor trombone: "is a non-transposing instrument pitched in B♭". So, where do I enter that?




Yes, brass instruments can be a little tricky for this reason.



Although we say that a trombone is "in B♭," it's actually written in C; it's a non-transposing instrument. But the trombone itself is based in B♭, so first position will play the harmonic series on that pitch. The "in B♭" thus relates to the instrument's construction, not to a score transposition.



The same is true for tubas: you can have Tuba in C, Tuba in B♭, Tuba in F, and Tuba in E♭, but they are all non-transposing instruments. Whereas the score transposes for other instruments, the tubist must learn different fingerings depending on the instrument s/he is playing. (If you think that's confusing, try being the tuba player that has to learn four sets of fingerings!)



To add to that confusion, you'll occasionally encounter some European brass band transcriptions where the tuba (or baritone or euphonium) is written in treble clef as a transposing instrument (!). In cases like this, we just have to let context decide.



And there's one final level of confusion: this doesn't apply to all brass instruments. Trumpets, for instance, are written in transposed scores. The most common is probably the Trumpet in B♭ (which is written like the B♭ Clarinet), but there's also Trumpet in C (which is not transposed) and occasionally Trumpet in D.






share|improve this answer
















Wikipedia says of the tenor trombone: "is a non-transposing instrument pitched in B♭". So, where do I enter that?




Yes, brass instruments can be a little tricky for this reason.



Although we say that a trombone is "in B♭," it's actually written in C; it's a non-transposing instrument. But the trombone itself is based in B♭, so first position will play the harmonic series on that pitch. The "in B♭" thus relates to the instrument's construction, not to a score transposition.



The same is true for tubas: you can have Tuba in C, Tuba in B♭, Tuba in F, and Tuba in E♭, but they are all non-transposing instruments. Whereas the score transposes for other instruments, the tubist must learn different fingerings depending on the instrument s/he is playing. (If you think that's confusing, try being the tuba player that has to learn four sets of fingerings!)



To add to that confusion, you'll occasionally encounter some European brass band transcriptions where the tuba (or baritone or euphonium) is written in treble clef as a transposing instrument (!). In cases like this, we just have to let context decide.



And there's one final level of confusion: this doesn't apply to all brass instruments. Trumpets, for instance, are written in transposed scores. The most common is probably the Trumpet in B♭ (which is written like the B♭ Clarinet), but there's also Trumpet in C (which is not transposed) and occasionally Trumpet in D.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 12 hours ago

























answered 12 hours ago









RichardRichard

45.5k7108195




45.5k7108195













  • Thanks. So, most of them are covered by my "too many to mention" comment in C. How about the trumpet, have I entered it correctly? E.g. could a trumpet play a clarinet part?

    – badjohn
    12 hours ago











  • @badjohn Yes, a B♭ Trumpet can play a B♭ Clarinet part. I've addressed this a bit in my edit.

    – Richard
    12 hours ago






  • 1





    Which families of instruments use transposition and which don't seems a bit arbitrary. E.g. saxophones all use the same fingering for the same written note yet the note produced varies greatly. Similarly, a viola could be considered as a violin in F but it isn't.

    – badjohn
    12 hours ago











  • Thanks for the trumpet in D. I'll add that.

    – badjohn
    12 hours ago











  • Trombones are indeed tuned to Bb open. However, there are several different 'keys' in which they're played, and possibly also written in different clefs.

    – Tim
    10 hours ago



















  • Thanks. So, most of them are covered by my "too many to mention" comment in C. How about the trumpet, have I entered it correctly? E.g. could a trumpet play a clarinet part?

    – badjohn
    12 hours ago











  • @badjohn Yes, a B♭ Trumpet can play a B♭ Clarinet part. I've addressed this a bit in my edit.

    – Richard
    12 hours ago






  • 1





    Which families of instruments use transposition and which don't seems a bit arbitrary. E.g. saxophones all use the same fingering for the same written note yet the note produced varies greatly. Similarly, a viola could be considered as a violin in F but it isn't.

    – badjohn
    12 hours ago











  • Thanks for the trumpet in D. I'll add that.

    – badjohn
    12 hours ago











  • Trombones are indeed tuned to Bb open. However, there are several different 'keys' in which they're played, and possibly also written in different clefs.

    – Tim
    10 hours ago

















Thanks. So, most of them are covered by my "too many to mention" comment in C. How about the trumpet, have I entered it correctly? E.g. could a trumpet play a clarinet part?

– badjohn
12 hours ago





Thanks. So, most of them are covered by my "too many to mention" comment in C. How about the trumpet, have I entered it correctly? E.g. could a trumpet play a clarinet part?

– badjohn
12 hours ago













@badjohn Yes, a B♭ Trumpet can play a B♭ Clarinet part. I've addressed this a bit in my edit.

– Richard
12 hours ago





@badjohn Yes, a B♭ Trumpet can play a B♭ Clarinet part. I've addressed this a bit in my edit.

– Richard
12 hours ago




1




1





Which families of instruments use transposition and which don't seems a bit arbitrary. E.g. saxophones all use the same fingering for the same written note yet the note produced varies greatly. Similarly, a viola could be considered as a violin in F but it isn't.

– badjohn
12 hours ago





Which families of instruments use transposition and which don't seems a bit arbitrary. E.g. saxophones all use the same fingering for the same written note yet the note produced varies greatly. Similarly, a viola could be considered as a violin in F but it isn't.

– badjohn
12 hours ago













Thanks for the trumpet in D. I'll add that.

– badjohn
12 hours ago





Thanks for the trumpet in D. I'll add that.

– badjohn
12 hours ago













Trombones are indeed tuned to Bb open. However, there are several different 'keys' in which they're played, and possibly also written in different clefs.

– Tim
10 hours ago





Trombones are indeed tuned to Bb open. However, there are several different 'keys' in which they're played, and possibly also written in different clefs.

– Tim
10 hours ago











2














(Copied over from the question for easier editing.)



C - Non-transposing or by whole octaves




  • At concert pitch - too many to mention.


  • Many brass instruments, e.g. the trombone and tuba, may be described as being in B♭, E♭, F, etc. However, their parts are normally written at concert pitch and hence they are not transposing instruments in the sense here. The trumpet however is usually a transposing instrument and is mentioned below. It is not the most common but there is a trumpet in C.


  • Octave above - piccolo.


  • Octave below - double bass and double bassoon. Also guitar and bass guitar.


D♭



Some piccolos. So, an octave and minor second above?



D



It is not the most common but there is trumpet in D.



E♭




  • E♭ clarinet - minor 3rd above.

  • Alto sax - major 6th below.

  • Baritone sax - octave and major 6th below.


F




  • French horn and cor anglais - Fifth below

  • I have a tin whistle labeled G but, as explained in A♭, this could be regarded as transposing in F. A fourth above.


A♭



I have a tin whistle which is labeled B♭ but this refers to its lowest note which is D on a standard whistle. So, if treated as a transposing version of the common D whistle, it would be a major 3rd below and hence in A♭.



A



A clarinet and oboe d'amour - minor 3rd below



B♭




  • Many. This seems to be the most common case.

  • Trumpet, B♭ clarinet, soprano sax - a major second below.

  • Bass clarinet and tenor sax - Octave and a major second below.






share|improve this answer


























  • Thanks. So, should people edit this to add further information?

    – badjohn
    10 hours ago
















2














(Copied over from the question for easier editing.)



C - Non-transposing or by whole octaves




  • At concert pitch - too many to mention.


  • Many brass instruments, e.g. the trombone and tuba, may be described as being in B♭, E♭, F, etc. However, their parts are normally written at concert pitch and hence they are not transposing instruments in the sense here. The trumpet however is usually a transposing instrument and is mentioned below. It is not the most common but there is a trumpet in C.


  • Octave above - piccolo.


  • Octave below - double bass and double bassoon. Also guitar and bass guitar.


D♭



Some piccolos. So, an octave and minor second above?



D



It is not the most common but there is trumpet in D.



E♭




  • E♭ clarinet - minor 3rd above.

  • Alto sax - major 6th below.

  • Baritone sax - octave and major 6th below.


F




  • French horn and cor anglais - Fifth below

  • I have a tin whistle labeled G but, as explained in A♭, this could be regarded as transposing in F. A fourth above.


A♭



I have a tin whistle which is labeled B♭ but this refers to its lowest note which is D on a standard whistle. So, if treated as a transposing version of the common D whistle, it would be a major 3rd below and hence in A♭.



A



A clarinet and oboe d'amour - minor 3rd below



B♭




  • Many. This seems to be the most common case.

  • Trumpet, B♭ clarinet, soprano sax - a major second below.

  • Bass clarinet and tenor sax - Octave and a major second below.






share|improve this answer


























  • Thanks. So, should people edit this to add further information?

    – badjohn
    10 hours ago














2












2








2







(Copied over from the question for easier editing.)



C - Non-transposing or by whole octaves




  • At concert pitch - too many to mention.


  • Many brass instruments, e.g. the trombone and tuba, may be described as being in B♭, E♭, F, etc. However, their parts are normally written at concert pitch and hence they are not transposing instruments in the sense here. The trumpet however is usually a transposing instrument and is mentioned below. It is not the most common but there is a trumpet in C.


  • Octave above - piccolo.


  • Octave below - double bass and double bassoon. Also guitar and bass guitar.


D♭



Some piccolos. So, an octave and minor second above?



D



It is not the most common but there is trumpet in D.



E♭




  • E♭ clarinet - minor 3rd above.

  • Alto sax - major 6th below.

  • Baritone sax - octave and major 6th below.


F




  • French horn and cor anglais - Fifth below

  • I have a tin whistle labeled G but, as explained in A♭, this could be regarded as transposing in F. A fourth above.


A♭



I have a tin whistle which is labeled B♭ but this refers to its lowest note which is D on a standard whistle. So, if treated as a transposing version of the common D whistle, it would be a major 3rd below and hence in A♭.



A



A clarinet and oboe d'amour - minor 3rd below



B♭




  • Many. This seems to be the most common case.

  • Trumpet, B♭ clarinet, soprano sax - a major second below.

  • Bass clarinet and tenor sax - Octave and a major second below.






share|improve this answer















(Copied over from the question for easier editing.)



C - Non-transposing or by whole octaves




  • At concert pitch - too many to mention.


  • Many brass instruments, e.g. the trombone and tuba, may be described as being in B♭, E♭, F, etc. However, their parts are normally written at concert pitch and hence they are not transposing instruments in the sense here. The trumpet however is usually a transposing instrument and is mentioned below. It is not the most common but there is a trumpet in C.


  • Octave above - piccolo.


  • Octave below - double bass and double bassoon. Also guitar and bass guitar.


D♭



Some piccolos. So, an octave and minor second above?



D



It is not the most common but there is trumpet in D.



E♭




  • E♭ clarinet - minor 3rd above.

  • Alto sax - major 6th below.

  • Baritone sax - octave and major 6th below.


F




  • French horn and cor anglais - Fifth below

  • I have a tin whistle labeled G but, as explained in A♭, this could be regarded as transposing in F. A fourth above.


A♭



I have a tin whistle which is labeled B♭ but this refers to its lowest note which is D on a standard whistle. So, if treated as a transposing version of the common D whistle, it would be a major 3rd below and hence in A♭.



A



A clarinet and oboe d'amour - minor 3rd below



B♭




  • Many. This seems to be the most common case.

  • Trumpet, B♭ clarinet, soprano sax - a major second below.

  • Bass clarinet and tenor sax - Octave and a major second below.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 10 hours ago


























community wiki





2 revs, 2 users 94%
guidot














  • Thanks. So, should people edit this to add further information?

    – badjohn
    10 hours ago



















  • Thanks. So, should people edit this to add further information?

    – badjohn
    10 hours ago

















Thanks. So, should people edit this to add further information?

– badjohn
10 hours ago





Thanks. So, should people edit this to add further information?

– badjohn
10 hours ago


















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